SCIENTISTS WHO CONTRIBUTED to the DEVELOPMENT OF Periodic Table ARE DMITRI MENDELEEV, JOHN DALTON, Johann Dobereiner, John Newlands, Julius Lothar Meyer, etc.
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Dmitri Mendeleev: Developed the periodic table in 1869, organizing elements by atomic weight and predicting new elements. Henry Moseley: Arranged elements by atomic number, leading to the modern periodic table. Glenn T. Seaborg: Proposed the actinide and transactinide series, expanding the periodic table to include more elements.
.In 1869 the Russian chemistry professor Dmitri Ivanovich Mendeleev and four months later the German Julius Lothar Meyer independently developed the first periodic table, arranging the elements by mass. its invention though is generally credited to Russian chemist Dmitri Mendeleev . The layout of the table has been refined and extended over time, as new elements have been discovered. In the 1940s Glenn T. Seaborg identified the transuranic lanthanides and the actinides, which may be placed within the table, or below
The periodic table was originally conceived upon by Antoine Lavoisier. The periodic table now widely used was refined by Dmitri Ivanovich Mendeleev and is sometimes called "Mendeleev's Table".
Jean Baptiste Dumas, Leopold Gmelin, Ernst Lenssen, Max von Pettenkofer, and J.P. Cooke, John Newlands, A.E.Beguyer de Chancourtois, and there are many others who discovered and contributed the elements in the table periodic table... Some of the elements are named after its founder or the one who discovered it..
.. the one who made the PT was Lothar Meyer and Dmitri Mendeleev.. but Mendeleev was considered as the father of Periodic Table because his table became available to the scientific community before the table of Meyer's appeared.. :)
The Periodic Table was not something that was discovered. It is rather a organization of elements by their properties. The first scientist accredited with putting the periodic table together was Dmitri Mendeleev. He developed it in 1869 to illustrate periodic trends in the properties of the then-known elements; the layout has been refined and extended as new elements have been discovered and new theoretical models developed to explain chemical behavior. Mendeleev's presentation also predicted some properties of then-unknown elements expected to fill gaps in his arrangement; these predictions were proved right when those elements were discovered and found to have properties close to the predictions.
The periodic table has been changing the amount of elements since its creation, this table was elaborated to classify and distribute the chemical elements, based on their properties and characteristics. The invention of this table is due to the Russian, Dmitri Mendeleyev, a chemist from the University of St. Petersburg. While Dmitri published his periodic table in the year 1869, another chemist of German origin called, Julius Lothar Meyer, published another version a year later. At that time only about 60 elements were known within the natural, compared to the 112 that are known today. Both chemicals were based on some characteristics to be able to classify the elements, among them, that of placing the elements based on their atomic number.
Russian chemistry professor Dmitri Ivanovich Mendeleevand Julius Lothar Meyer independently published their periodic tables in 1869 and 1870, respectively.
This scientist was J. J. Thomson.
JJ Thomson discovered the electron in 1897.
De Chancourtois is known for his contribution to the development of the early periodic table of elements. He arranged the elements in a spiral or helical format based on atomic weights, which foreshadowed the modern periodic table structure. This arrangement helped in understanding the periodic trends and relationships between elements, paving the way for the organization of elements we use today.
The scientist who recognized the periodic table for atomic number was Henry Moseley. He discovered that elements should be ordered by atomic number rather than atomic mass, which led to the modern understanding of the periodic table.
He found the number of protons an element has. present periodic table is according to it.